CRUNCHTIME SUMMER LEAGUE HIGHLIGHTS AND RECAPS!!

ILUVBBALL IS PROUD TO BE THE HOME OF ALL GAME HIGHLIGHTS, SCHEDULES AND RECAPS

FOR THE CRUNCHTIME SUMMER LEAGUE!!

 

ILUVBBALL IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE THAT

WE ARE THE OFFICIAL MEDIA PARTNER OF THE

CRUNCHTIME MENS LEAGUE

You must log in to view this content. Please log in to continue. Not a member? You can join here

The AABClassic Slam Dunk & 3pt Shootout Recap; a “Family Affair”

The 7th Annual Alzheimer’s AABClassic Slam Dunk & 3pt Shootout Contest Recap!

If you haven’t heard yet the 7th Annual Alzheimer’s Slam Dunk and 3 point Shootout Contest was a great success! We had some of the best shooters and dunkers representing the public, private, and independent schools on the Island and boy was it a show!!

Where the Weiss family from Hewlett completed a 3-point contest clean sweep taking the crown in both the boys & girls contest! Making this years contest a Family Affair!

You must log in to view this content. Please log in to continue. Not a member? You can join here

Long Island Nets Keep’s it Rolling to 10 WINS!

LONG ISLAND DEFEATS ERIE FOR 10TH WIN IN A ROW

 

 

LONG ISLAND (March 13, 2019) – The Long Island Nets (31-15), the NBA G League affiliate of the Brooklyn Nets, defeated the Erie BayHawks (21-25) 125-109 at NYCB LIVE, home of the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum. The win is the Nets’ 10th in a row, which is the longest winning streak in the NBA G League this season. The team has also won eight straight home games, which also marks the longest streak in the league this season.

 

Long Island guard Jordan McLaughlin scored a team-high 27 points with five rebounds, seven assists, three steals and a block in 35 minutes of action.

Brooklyn two-way forward/center Alan Williams logged his 29th double-double of the season with 18 points and 18 rebounds along with a career-high seven assists in 31 minutes.

Long Island dominated the boards in the opening period with 20 rebounds compared to Erie’s five. This led to a seven-point lead heading into the second quarter by a score of 34-27. Erie battled back in the second, outscoring Long Island 30-27 and keeping the Nets under 40 percent shooting from the field. Long Island’s lead was cut down to four heading into halftime, 61-57.

 

The Nets came out looking to control the glass again and pulled down more than double the rebounds the BayHawks did in the third, 16-7. This led to Long Island having 11 second chance points compared to Erie’s two. Heading into the final period of play, the Nets extended to an 11-point lead, 95-84. Long Island coasted to the finish-line, leading by as many as 18 points before defeating Erie 125-109 for their 10th victory in a row.

 

Erie guard Cat Barber scored a game-high 35 points with seven rebounds, five assists and two steals in 37 minutes, while BayHawks guard Jaylen Morris scored 28 points with five rebounds, six assists, three steals and a block in 42 minutes.

Long Island will take on the Maine Red Claws on the road on Friday, Mar. 15, at 7 p.m. ET. Their next home game is

 

Check out the Long Island Nets game highlights vs Erie Bayhawks below!

Check out Jordan McLaughlin 27 point Highlights below!


CLICK THE IMAGE BELOW to get your tickets to the Long Island Nets LAST regular season game and Fan Appreciation Night where the Nets face the Milwaukee Bucks NBA affiliate team the Wisconsin Herd!

The first 1000 fans will receive a Dale the Eagle bobblehead!

 

 

You can’t make that game?

Well CLICK THE IMAGE BELOW TO

PURCHASE YOUR PLAYOFF TICKETS

to support your  LONG ISLAND NETS!

Tobias Harris: Why am I always traded?

 

 

A special audience awaited Los Angeles Clippers forward Tobias Harris early Saturday evening.

Fresh from overcoming a 25-point deficit in beating the Detroit Pistons, 111-101, at Little Caesars Arena, a freshly dressed Harris walked toward the section of seats behind the visitors’ bench.

There, more than 100 Detroit-area kids, bearing T-shirts acknowledging their connection to the former Piston, waited anxiously from a few words from Harris.

It’s a continuation of the mentorship programs he started while with the Pistons for almost two years.

And it showed his determination in keeping the programs going — despite being traded to the Clippers last year in the transaction that brought Blake Griffin to the Pistons.

It’s reminiscent of how he has kept the programs going in Orlando after he was traded to the Pistons before the 2016 trade deadline.

All of it is evidence of Harris’ high character.

And all while averaging nearly 21 points per game and shooting 43 percent from 3-point range for a team battling for a playoff spot in the rugged Western Conference.

Tobias Harris shoots over Pistons guard

Reggie Bullock on Saturday at LCA. 

(Photo: Tim Fuller, USA TODAY Sports)

 

But the eight-year veteran is still seeking respect.

He was denied his first All-Star Game appearance on Thursday when coaches picked seven others as the Western Conference reserves.

He was traded four times before his 26th birthday.

Harris admitted he wonders why he is always deemed expendable.

“I pride myself on being professional, doing right,”

Harris said in explaining how his value goes beyond the stat sheet. “But that could also be a value to another organization. God always has a plan for you. Every situation I’ve been traded to, I’ve been blessed and fortunate to be in a good situation. I came here, and it was a great situation to be coming to, to be part of a good culture.

“I got to the playoffs (in 2016), that was great experience for me. Also to be able to play in this new arena. I really enjoyed my time here, I embraced the city. It was fun time to be a part of it.”

 

Tobias is no stranger to adversity and he’s a prime example of hard work paying off. Traded 4 times in his 18 years as a pro, he is a very respected player. The fact is, if he had no value he wouldn’t be a trade option for the teams. Tobias not only has a major impact on the teams that he plays for but the communities that he touches while being part of those teams.

 Everywhere he goes, Tobias makes it a point to connect with young people in his team’s city.

In stride with our story,Tobias’ being traded is the fact that while doing his thing on the court, he is a great mentor and continues his work with the youth in the communities that he plays for.

Tobias continues his mentorship program in Los Angeles where in November he was at  the Weingart YMCA Wellness and Aquatic Center, he donated 250 frozen turkeys, wrapped in black “TOBIAS”-branded tote bags! Not only was he there handing them out to families with strollers, senior citizens in wheelchairs, kids on tricycles, single mothers carrying babies on their hips and war veterans, he’s joined by 30 members of the Tobias’ Troops Mentorship Program, in partnership with the Clippers’ Mentorship Assist Zone.

Tobias Harris hands out a frozen turkey in South LA. (Magdalena Munao)

 

 

Click HERE to see the full story on 

See Full story on

Ex-Detroit Piston Tobias Harris has wondered:

Why am I always traded?

by clicking HERE.

Throwback Thursday – From the G League to the NBA!

After an incredible journey from the G League to the NBA, Jonathon Simmons has earned his spot on the San Antonio Spurs! The NBA G League is the NBA’s official minor league. Fans can get a glimpse at the players, coaches and officials competing to ascend to the NBA’s rank.

Will you be able to say that you met the next star when…?

Who will be the next player called up?

#beapartofhistory get your Long Island Nets tickets now by clicking Here!

Oh and don’t forget to tell them who sent you?